Celebrity podiatrist Dr. Suzanne Levine is selling her office of 25 years — a maisonette near 78th Street that has brought in actresses, directors and heads of state.

Now she’s looking for a creative buyer for the $1.25 million medical space, bringing her one step closer to fulfilling her dream of opening the city’s first shoe museum.

“This is the shoe capital of the world,” Levine told The Post. “I feel it’s my purpose in life to build a shoe museum in New York City, where you have access to all kinds of shoes.”

The tootsy tamer — who provides “foot face lifts,” offers plastic surgery to shorten toes or slim the feet and uses injections to make stilettos easier to wear — has moved most of her practice, Institute Beauté, into a larger space in the Park Avenue building, where she has a mini-museum of Victorian-era boots and 1950s pumps on display. Her budding gallery also includes a limited edition Prada shoe that was on display at the Metropolitan Museum.

Levine says she paid $490 a month when she first moved into the ground floor of 885 Park Ave., a prewar building former NFL commissioner Paul Tagliabue once called home.

She purchased the maisonette for an undisclosed amount after the building turned into a co-op in the late 1980s.

Raised in then-blue-collar Williamsburg, Brooklyn, Levine attributes much of her success to the lucky Park Avenue apartment.

The apartment — listed by Douglas Elliman’s Suzanne Sealy — includes four exam rooms, waiting and reception rooms, a bathroom and private entrance.

“It’s a very lucky space,” Levine said. “There’s part of me that doesn’t want to let go, but we can’t leave it empty. These walls want someone here.”